Post on 18-Aug-2015
E-TEXTILES FOR MILITARY UNIFORMS
By,Kaleeswaran .P
CONTENTSINTRODUCTIONSMART FABRIC
STATISTICSSMART CLOTHINGSENSATEX SMART
SHIRTCITYZEN SMART SENSEWEARABLE ELECTRIC
BLANKETPIEZO SENSITIVE
MATERIALSSOLAR ARRAY
BLANKETS
ANTENNASCOMMUNICATION
REQUIREMENTSPHOTOVOLTAIC FIBREFLEXIBLE SENSORSCAMOUFLAGEREFERENCES
INTRODUCTIONThe ability to integrate electronics into textiles
provides the potential to achieve revolutionary improvements in performance and the realization of capabilities never before imagined on the battlefield.
Electronic devices are being miniaturized for personal use both in the commercial and military sectors. Materials and methods are being investigated to facilitate the integration of these electronics into textiles.
SMART FABRIC END USE MARKETS 2011
SMART CLOTHING
REIMA SMART CLOTHING
SENSATEX SMART SHIRT
SENSATEX SMART SHIRTIf a soldier wears the “Smart Shirt” during war and
gets injured, information on the wound and the soldier’s condition would be immediately transmitted to a medical triage unit near the battlefield.
This shirt can help a physician determine the extent of a soldier’s injury based on the strength of his heartbeat and respiratory rate.
This information lets physicians know the urgency of who to treat first.
CITYZEN SMART SENSEConnect the garment to a compact, battery-powered
transmitter, turn on the smartphone's bluetooth connection, and suddenly have a customized body monitoring system.
The fabric communicates with an app on the phone to keep tabs on heart rate, respiration and metrics. Ultimately, the system notes how tired or stressed the person is, and could even alert for the onset of a medical problem.
In spite of its high-tech nature, the Smart Sensing fabric can be washed and ironed normally.
CITYZEN SMART SHIRT
WEARABLE ELECTRIC BLANKET
An electric blanket was developed without the stiff, bulky wires traditionally used.
The new blanket is lighter, more flexible and can be machine-washed and dried. Plugged in, it warms evenly using the same amount of power as a 100 W light bulb.
PIEZO SENSITIVE MATERIALS
PVDF [poly(vinylidene fluoride)] and its copolymers P(VDF-TrFE) [poly(vinylidene fluoride-trifluoroethylene)] and P(VDF-TFE) – [poly (vinylidene fluoride-tetrafluoroethylene)] exhibit the best electromechanical performances.
PIEZO SENSITIVE MATERIALSFor a soldier or adventurer stranded for days without
access to electrical outlets, this kind of technology holds great potential. The material can be used for under the boots.
If the rate of change of application of load is higher, then the voltage produced will be higher.
Suddenly, there would be a way to revive depleted batteries in a satellite phone or GPS unit. A situation that was once potentially deadly could be managed much more easily just by simply walking around for a while.
SOLAR ARRAY BLANKETSU.S. Naval Research Laboratory has developed solar array blankets that combine high power output with light weight and flexibility.
The technology, known as inverted metamorphic (IMM) triple junction (3J) solar cells, allows a thin membrane material to be placed on a flexible substrate.
The resulting solar blanket has a higher power output while being lightweight.
ECG & EMG MEASUREMENT
ANTENNAS
Double loop antenna integrated into the MOLLE vest with ergonomic modules.Frequency Range: 30–88-MHz
Eight-element patch antenna array
Frequency Range: upto 2.4 GHz
COMMUNICATION REQUIREMENTS
COMMUNICATION REQUIREMENTS
PHOTOVOLTAIC FIBRE
The MDMO-PPV:PCBM compound produced 300 mV and 0.27 mA/cm 2 , giving a fill factor of 26% and an efficiency of 0.021%
The fill factor is determined by the ratio between the actually achievable maximum power (given by the current times the voltage at the maximum power point (mpp)) and the theoretical value (given by the short- circuit current (I sc ) times the open- circuit voltage (V oc ))
P3HT - Poly(3-hexylthiophene-2,5-diyl)
PCBM - Phenyl-C61-butyric acid methyl esterMDMO-PPV — poly[2-méthoxy-5-(3,7-diméthyloctyloxy)-1,4-phénylène-vinylène] PEDOT:PSS - Poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) Polystyrene sulfonate
FLEXIBLE SENSORSSingle crystal silicon accelerometer with mG resolution (1 G=9.81 m/s2) has been fabricated using Silicon Fusion Bonding (SFB) and Deep Reactive Ion Etching (DRIE).
Signal obtained from an acceleration sensor with a sample rate of 32 Hz and a resolution of 10 mG
CAMOUFLAGEColor change is activated by body heat or through
resistive heating that employs a layering of conductive and thermochromic inks (on battery testers), in which case the conductive/resistive ink heats up and changes the color of the ink.
Shimmering Flower- Product NameThis textile can have up to sixty four fabric pixels
arranged in an arbitrary design. Each pixel is individually addressable (with conductive yarns) and is controlled to slowly change color. Each color change can be programmed in the custom electronics board or controlled in real time when the display is connected to a computer through the serial port.
REFERENCESSmart clothes and wearable technology, Edited
by J. McCann and D. Bryson, Woodhead Publishing in Textiles
Multidisciplinary know- how for smart- textiles developers, Edited by Tünde Kirstein, Woodhead Publishing in Textiles
Wearable electronics and photonics, Edited by Xiaoming Tao, Woodhead Publishing Limited
A novel intelligent textile technology based on silicon flexible skins, Rakesh B. Katragadda, Yong Xu, Sensors and Actuators A 143 (2008) 169–174
REFERENCESElectronic Textiles: Wearable Computers, Reactive Fashion,
and Soft Computation, Joanna Berzowska, Textile, Volume 3Development of Electronic Textiles to Support Networks,
Communications, and Medical Applications in Future U.S. Military Protective Clothing Systems, Carole A. Winterhalter, Justyna Teverovsky, Patricia Wilson, Jeremiah Slade, Wendy Horowitz, Edward Tierney, and Vikram Sharma, IEEE Transactions on Information Technology in Biomedicine, Vol. 9, No. 3, September 2005
Potential Space Applications For Body-centric Wireless And E-textile Antennas, T.F. Kennedy, P.W. Fink, A.W. Chu, G.F. Studor, NASA Johnson Space Center, Houston, TX, USA
Smart Textiles for Soldier of the Future, 0. Sahin, 0. Kayacan, E. Yazgan Bulgun, Defence Science Journal, Vol. 55, No. 2, April 2005